
The Labour Partyās new leader (Image: Mark Thomas/REX Shutterstock)
He wants Charles Darwinās birthday to be a public holiday. And he accepts that human activity is warming up the planet. But where does Jeremy Corbyn, voted the leader of Britainās opposition Labour Party on 12 September, stand on mainstream political issues ?
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Corbyn certainly seems on message as far as climate change is concerned. In 2010, he signed an early day motion ā a form of petition regularly used in Parliament to gauge opinion on key issues ā recognising that . Likewise he has pressed the current government to double its targets for .
The new Labour leaderās remarks on potentially reopening coal mines got a lot of coverage. : āIf thereās to be substantial coal fire generation itās got to be clean burn technology, itās got to have carbon filters on it, itās got to be carbon neutral.ā Corbyn has said he wants to nationalise Britainās energy supplies, a goal that according to some estimates . As a member of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament since 1966, his stand on civil nuclear power is unclear.
Corbynās backing for the UK National Health Service to remain publically funded , but he has raised scientific eyebrows by appearing to offer support for homeopathy, despite the lack of scientific proof that it works. In one infamous tweet in 2011, Corbyn said he believed homeopathy āworks for some peopleā and compliments conventional medicine, as āthey both come from organic matterā.
I believe that homeo-meds works for some ppl and that it compliments āconventialā meds. they both come from organic matterā¦
ā Jeremy Corbyn MP (@jeremycorbyn)
Corbyn has also signed various early day motions .
Science is vital
In a novel move, . In February he spoke in parliament on why he thought mental health was such an important issue.
Last month, Corbyn affirmed his backing for scientific and technological research in . āThe UK has produced some wonderful scientists and engineers ā real innovators in their fields, but too often we do not have the supportive infrastructure to develop their ideas here,ā he said. āOnly a strategic state that supports innovation can close this infrastructure deficit holding the UK back.ā
Corbyn also backed a calling for the reversal of cuts to the science budget.
But some commentators believe that other policies Corbyn has could work against this, such as his pledge to reduce tuition fees for students, currently around Ā£9000 per year for each student. Kieron Flanagan, a lecturer in science and technology policy at Manchester Business School, says that the fees have brought valuable income to universities that they can spend on research, but that this would disappear if the fees were scrapped. āWould it be replaced by an equivalent amount from central government funds?ā asks Flanagan.